Can you live far from your better half?
I spent almost two years far from my girlfriend when I first came to London, then we moved together to Madrid (for one year), and now I am back to London for a while ... alone
(she has to finish her long, too long studies)Well, we are not this far as we only have to cross the channel to see each other but I feel quite lonely. Fortunately there's messenger etc so we can speak quite often but ... that not easy

Have you ever lived this situation?
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It was very tough, especially for her having the culture shock and all, and being all alone in a completely different culture. But we did manage, got engaged and got married a year later!

Oh, and while ICQ did work fairly well, Skype had a delay of up to more than a minute, so it wasn't worth the effort to skype. Apparently, this is much better now.
at that time (2004) it also was illegal to use voice-over-IP for phone calls in south africa. I only found that out a year later, though, when it was "legalized". So, if you see a "wanted" poster from South Africa with charges of repeatedly using (well, trying to use) VoIP, that would be me.

It's really tough being apart, but it's not going to be forever!

BoPeep wrote:It's really tough being apart, but it's not going to be forever!
I think exactly the same thing. Who's gonna leave the continent BoPeep? Is it you who'll move to the US or is it her who'll move to Europe?
Good news, my girlfriend will be in London next week end
(I didn't see her for three weeks now)
I think I will be the one packing and moving...
Ho I HATE these airport/train goodbyes, I know them since 2000! (we've been quite often separated actually)
I hope you'll quickly see him again, and that you'll have a good time together.
Take care,
Julien, from London
We'll have been apart for over 3 months which just seems like forever... (been together 11 months)... then we only get 10 days together, but it's much better than nothing at all!
aurora94 wrote:Let's see...before we got married, DH and I were apart (me in U.S., he in Japan) for 1 1/2 years--separated by a 14-hour time difference and the great stretch of the Atlantic Ocean (or Pacific, whichever way you're flying).
That's awful! How did you manage this situation?
Julien wrote:aurora94 wrote:Let's see...before we got married, DH and I were apart (me in U.S., he in Japan) for 1 1/2 years--separated by a 14-hour time difference and the great stretch of the Atlantic Ocean (or Pacific, whichever way you're flying).
That's awful! How did you manage this situation?
With a very large phone bill and a few trips back and forth. 
聽 聽I've been using skype to keep in touch. Its cheap fast and feels real. You should try it, cause US & Japan it's far far away.
I've bought this new unlimited calls package to call US. The total package was only $29.95 and I can make call anytime and as long as I want.
Don't ask me why... I guess we both expect the other one to leave his life...
Now I'm happy with someone else and he's too, so I guess it was a wonderful story...
At the time, we were using skype every night and low cost company because our two towns were linked by one: cheap to go twice a months, that was good.
and does anyone know of a good Spanish lesson program? been watching Dora the Explorer w/the kids, but i feel somehow that i'm missing something...

thanks in advance! you guys are always so helpful!

It seems like it would depend as much on your own personality, how much time you have spent apart, and how much you would have to do....if you will already have a house set up, with furnishings, and all utilities in place, and you are used to parenting on your own, and being away from your spouse, well, go for it.
I think that you will probably find it much more stressful setting up here, than closing up there...and the kids going into school will not want to be too jet-lagged on top of the other issues.
One strong argument for coming over with the kids first is that it can be very hard on them to watch their life in their known home being packed up...we did it to our kids, and keep doing it to them, but it isn麓t easy for them...maybe you and your spouse come over and get a place, and get it set up...budget for this...an unfurnished place in Spain only has to have a two burner stove, toilet and sink...so you may need to buy light fixtures etc etc etc....I would also gert in touch with the local international women麓s group, and get some contacts, then go home, and you come back with the kids, or all together....plan fun things for when you are there with the kids....
So much depends on you though. It also depends on how much you ahve traveled...if you are used to going to places where things are done differently, and you don麓t speak the language, then managing with babies, and luggage and jet-lag may be doable...but if not, well, it would be hard.
Depends a lot on you though...
As soon as I am back from office, I start with chatting with my husband and also call him and talk more than one hour or two hours, but I miss him a lot, and feeling lonely.
Been there, never going to do that again.
Also, I feel like if we can survive after this long, we can weather any difficulty married life throws our way. Having to rely on IM, skype and webcamming all this time has made us really good at communicating with eachother too so there are some perks..
Thankfully this is the last week we'll have to spend without eachother though!! soon we'll be married and then no one will be able to keep us apart

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My boyfriend lives in the mountains in the Alps while I live in the French Mediterranean. Lucky enough, I can/could spend winter and summer in the resort where he lives and works... but if I had a 9-5 kind of job, I would never be able to do that.
This will be our last months going back and forth. It's not working for me... I'm moving to the mountains, wherever they are :-P
When the loneliness got the best of me,i took a 10 working days leave(thats about 2 weeks and a half) to go to Ethiopia just to be close to her,and spend some time with her.
I flew to Ethiopia on 30th May and returned on 16th June,i really think it was worth it,am a bit settled now though am beginning to feel the distance again!
feel lonely? yes of course but trust (even its hard..) and good communication can help a little bit, and understanding...
wew..my opinion sounds so wise..hehehe,anyway that what me and my bf do, keep communicate and trust even we both far away..19 hours by flight..eugh..his ass must be sore

BoPeep wrote:I am currently separated from my beloved by 5,000 miles, the Atlantic Ocean and 7 time zones. It is NOT something we want to do permanently! But we met online, have spent several months together in either Europe or the US, and are just waiting to see what happens next.
It's really tough being apart, but it's not going to be forever!
This is almost identical to my current situation. I'm living in Europe and my Girlfriend in in Los Angeles. We met in Dec 2008 and I hope to move there in Jan 2010. Its very difficult but we have tqalked so much and our visits have been so intense that I wouldn't swap it for anything.
I think its a really great way to get to know some one very well and to appreciate them for who they are. 
Good luck to everyone in Love.
However, I do know quite a few couples who're doing this (some even married). One couple is in Iceland and Germany, another Iceland and Switzerland, another France and USA. They usually manage to see each other once every other month at the least, and fill the gaps with a lot of skyping and video chat.
it probably helps that in all those situations, one half of the couple is a student and therefore has a more flexible schedule when it comes to where they're working. They can afford the frequent absences from "home base" in order to visit their other halves.
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